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Latest NewsPay & benefitsMinimum wage

Undercover journalist exposes illegal low pay in hotel

by Personnel Today 6 Sep 2006
by Personnel Today 6 Sep 2006

An undercover investigation has revealed some hotel staff are being paid as little as £1.50 per hour – a fraction of the £5.05 minimum wage.

A Sky News reporter spent six days working for a Jury’s Inn hotel in Southampton and was paid just £58, which works out at an hourly rate of about £1.50.

The reporter was hired as a housekeeper at the hotel, part of a chain of 20, after contacting employment agency Foremost Logistics Services.

Most of the staff at the hotel worked an average of around six hours a day, cleaning rooms, the investigation revealed. But at £1.80 per room, they would need to clean 17 a day to earn more than the average wage.

Paul Sellers, a minimum wage adviser with the TUC, said: “Frankly, I’m horrified. Simply everybody should be able to get the minimum wage.”

When Sky confronted Foremost Logistics Services, it apologised and said there had been a “serious communications collapse”.

The agency said that the reporter would be given his full legal entitlement of £5.05 an hour.

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The hotel said in a statement: “Jurys Doyle Hotel Group would expect as a matter of course that contractors fulfil their contractual obligations and abide by all regulatory requirements at all times.”

Hospitality employers split over banning migrant staff from new accession states

Personnel Today

Personnel Today articles are written by an expert team of award-winning journalists who have been covering HR and L&D for many years. Some of our content is attributed to "Personnel Today" for a number of reasons, including: when numerous authors are associated with writing or editing a piece; or when the author is unknown (particularly for older articles).

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